Senin 22 Oct 2012 13:38 WIB

Indonesia FDI at record 5.9 billion USD on Q3

Indonesia booked total FDI of 107.6 trillion IDR in the first half this year, led by mining and manufacturing (illustration)
Foto: Republika/Wihdan Hidayat
Indonesia booked total FDI of 107.6 trillion IDR in the first half this year, led by mining and manufacturing (illustration)

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, JAKARTA - A record 5.9 billion USD in foreign direct investment (FDI) flowed into Indonesia in the third quarter, showing that Southeast Asia's biggest economy remains resilient in the face of a bleak global outlook, Indonesian Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) said on Monday.

In rupiah terms, total FDI in July to September rose 22.00 percent year-on-year to 56.6 trillion IDR (5.90 billion USD), after 30.2 percent annual growth in the second quarter. The third quarter number is a record for any quarter.

Indonesia's economy is projected to grow 6.1-6.5 percent in 2012, relying on foreign direct investment and domestic consumption as exports turn negative due to weak demand from its main trade counterparts. The country has drawn strong portfolio funds and FDI in recent months after it regained investment grade status from two rating agencies.

Indonesia recorded a total FDI of 175.3 trillion IDR in 2011, rising 18 percent from a year earlier. According to Bapepam, the base chemical, mining, and transportation-telecommunication industries supported FDI growth in the third quarter, growing 17.6 percent, 16.8 and 12.8 percent year-on-year respectively.

Singapore and Japan were the top two foreign investors from January until September, BKPM Chief M. Chatib Basri said.

"In 2013, it will be difficult to achieve total investment targets due to the global economic slowdown," Basri added. Indonesia booked total FDI of 107.6 trillion IDR in the first half this year, led by mining and manufacturing.

"The trend is still positive in the third quarter," said David Sumual, economist at Bank Central Asia in Jakarta. "But the problem is how quickly government is able to provide infrastructure to support the investment. "If government fails to address this issue, I'm concerned that Indonesia will be stuck, it will decelerate growth of investment."

Indonesia is a favourite for emerging market investors because of its large domestic market, stable public finances and low debt. Domestic consumption makes up more than 50 percent of gross domestic product supported by a rising middle class and low interest rates.

Among the quarter's notable foreign investment deals, Japanese auto parts maker Denso Corp announced in September that it would build a new plant in Indonesia worth 110 million USD that will start operations in February 2014. The announcement came two months after Indonesia's investment board give the okay to Italian Pirelli's to construct a 126 million plant USD.

 

sumber : Reuters
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